Tips for Academic Success

Starting a new semester can be both exciting and daunting, whether you’re a new or returning student.  It’s important to set yourself up for success.

This Way to Student Success

Consider the following five tips tohelp you have the best semester possible:

  1. Plan for college academically.  Make sure you’re meeting with your advisor and keeping up with the requirements of your program.  Thinking of changing programs?  Meet with your advisor as soon as possible to see what new requirements you need to complete.
  2. Plan for college financially.  Make sure to keep up with your FAFSA, and budget at the beginning of the semester for basic living expenses.  If unexpected expenses come up, contact the Financial Aid Office to see if they have any advice, and for special circumstances, ask about the Dreamkeeper’s Emergency Assistance Program.
  3. Ask for help!  Admitting you need help or don’t know something can be a really uncomfortable moment, but not asking can end up being even more uncomfortable in the long term.  Need to know how to apply for C-STEP?  Haven’t used the library in a while and need a refresher?  Don’t know how or where to print or scan?  Don’t know where your class is?  Can’t figure out Sakai or WebAdvisor?  Ask a fellow student or a faculty or staff member.  (Oh, and for those library questions– come on in and we’ll gladly help you.  No judgement!)
  4. Stay focused on long-term goals.  Remember what your end goal is, especially when a class seems especially tough and you want to give up.  Need tutoring to get your through it?  Check out the Center for Academic Excellence or Upswing Online Tutoring to get help.  Need some collaboration and support? Start a study group.  Or, if you just need some moral support, find a friend with a sympathetic ear– it’s okay to be stressed out, but look for support to help you keep moving forward.
  5. Go to class, whether in person or online.  Enrolled in an online class, but having a hard time keeping up because you always leave it until the last minute?  Try creating a time to “go to class” digitally on a regular basis (before due dates) in order to better schedule your work.  Enrolled in face-to-face classes?  Make sure to attend in order to keep up, and if you have to miss class, be responsible and timely about getting the notes or missed work.

Do you have your own tips for success?  Stop by the front desk in the Main Campus Library and share your tips for a chance to have them displayed in the front window display OR fill out the form below to email the library your tips!  All are welcome to participate!

June is GLBT Book Month

GLBT Book Month image

Image from http://www.ala.org/glbtrt/glbt-book-month

Explore the library’s GLBTQ nonfiction, fiction, and DVD collections. Browse the online catalog for more titles.

book cover - You Can Tell Just By Looking  book cover - Trans Bodies, Trans Selves book cover - Middlesex

book cover- Bi: Notes for a Bisexual Revolution  book cover - A Positive View of LGBTQ book cover - Will Grayson, Will Grayson

book cover- The Right to Be OutBook cover -Travels in a Gay Nation Book cover - It Gets Better: Coming Out, Bullying, and Creating a Life Worth Living              Book cover- Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out  Book cover - LGBTQ Youth and Education Policies and Practices Book cover - The Miseducation of Cameron Post

The Stonewall Book Awards List, sponsored by the American Library Association’s Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Round Table, honors books for exceptional merit relating to the gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender experience in literature, nonfiction, and children’s and young adult literature.

http://www.ala.org/glbtrt/award/honored

 

Listen Up! : Free Audiobooks for your enjoyment

Like YA and/or classic literature? Like audiobooks?  Like free things?

sync logo

Every summer, AudioFile’s Sync summer “reading” program provides free weekly downloads of two audiobooks: one contemporary YA book and one work of classic literature that relates to the same theme.

The new season of free downloads starts on Thursday, May 7 with  Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl and Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca.  Check out the entire list of offerings (14 weeks worth!) on their website!

http://www.audiobooksync.com/

Films for African American History Month

Celebrate Black History Month by watching an inspirational film! The following films are available for viewing online through the library’s Films on Demand streaming video collection.  Click on the blue titles below for access.  There are more than 150  films for African American History available through Films on Demand and the library has many DVDs for check out too.

Eyes on the Prize film cover

Eyes on the Prize

Eyes on the Prize tells the definitive story of the civil rights era from the point of view of the ordinary men and women whose extraordinary actions launched a movement that changed the fabric of American life, and embodied a struggle whose reverberations continue to be felt today. Winner of numerous awards, Eyes on the Prize, is the most critically acclaimed documentary on civil rights in America. The 14-part series recounts the fight to end decades of discrimination and segregation.

February One

On February 1st, 1960, four men dressed in their Sunday best sat down at a lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C. but were refused service because of the color of their skin. In this inspiring documentary, the Greensboro Four themselves tell the story of the lunch counter sit-in that revitalized the civil rights movement and established a model of student activism for the coming decade.

Filling the Gap: A Forgotten Chapter of American History

Robert Smalls, Phyllis Wheatley, Elizabeth Keckley, Benjamin Banneker, and countless others of African descent who helped to build the American nation are profiled in this film. This film offers a wealth of dramatized narratives, from the remarkable story of Abdul Rahman Ibrahima, the African prince sold into slavery on a Mississippi plantation, to the White House meeting in which Frederick Douglass urged President Lincoln to uphold the honor and dignity of the Union’s black soldiers, each segment reenacts a pivotal moment in history.

Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice

Ida B. Wells-Barnett was a household name in black America during much of her lifetime (1863-1931). This film is a stirring biography of a crusading journalist, anti-lynching campaigner, and black suffragette during the most repressive years of the Jim Crow period. It documents the dramatic life and turbulent times of the pioneering African-American woman during the post-Reconstruction period.

Tuskegee Airmen: They Fought Two Wars

This inspiring documentary examines the 332nd Fighter Group and the 477th Bombardment Group of the U.S. Army Air Corps—the Tuskegee Airmen. These 450 black men fought the Nazis in World War II and, back in America, they fought prejudice, bigotry, and racism. Extraordinary airmen, they remain today the only fighter group never to have lost one of their bombers to enemy fire. Trained by the segregated military system, their successes led to the integration of the United States armed forces.

Best Books Read in 2014: The Durham Tech Faculty and Staff Edition

Check out our current window display showing off Durham Tech’s Faculty and Staff Best Books of 2014!  Want to read something we don’t have or that’s checked out?  Ask a librarian about getting it via interlibrary loan.

Click on a book for more details.

The Top Picks:

 

Other Best Reads:

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For a complete faculty and staff best book list, click on the following link to view the PDF: Durham Tech Faculty and Staff Best Books of 2014.

Happy Election Day!

For a bit of background history on why elections are held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, see this article on NPR.

Title against bright yellow background

During the 2008 elections Nate Silver began making a name for himself by using statistics to more accurately predict election results. The library has a copy of his book, The Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail But Some Don’t, available under call number CB 158 .S54 2012. The book provides a fascinating look into why numbers used in elections, sports statistics, weather forecasting, and even big events like the financial crash aren’t always accurate or reflecting what we think they are.

In honor of Election Day, here are some ebooks from our collection, which you can read online or download to a device:

Photograph of someone voting

The Politics of Voter Suppression: Defending and Expanding America’s Right to Vote by Tova Wang.

(Available as an ebook through the link or as a physical book in our collection under call number JK 1976 .W36 2012)

Cover laid out like the front page of a newspaper

The Myth of Voter Fraud by Lorraine Minnite (ebook!)

To find more ebooks, search the ebrary collection, which you can access from the library page noting it and other database collections.